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University of WollongongResearch Online
Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive) Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts
2000
The locus of decision-making authority in CircleSentencing: the significance of criteria andguidelinesLuke McNamaraUniversity of Wollongong, [email protected]
Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library:[email protected]
Publication DetailsThis article was originally published as McNamara, L, The Locus of Decision-Making Authority in Circle Sentencing: The Significanceof Criteria and Guidelines, Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 18, 2000, 60-114. Original journal available here.
http://ro.uow.edu.au/http://ro.uow.edu.au/http://ro.uow.edu.au/http://ro.uow.edu.auhttp://ro.uow.edu.au/lawpapershttp://ro.uow.edu.au/lha"http:/www.uwindsor.ca/wyaj"
The locus of decision-making authority in Circle Sentencing: thesignificance of criteria and guidelines
AbstractThis article analyses the criteria and guidelines that have been developed for the operation of circle sentencingas a method of First Nation community participation in the Canadian criminal justice system. The objective ofthis analysis is to determine whether circle sentencing has the potential to transfer decision-making authorityover sentencing from judges within the non-Aboriginal justice system to sentencing circle participants andFirst Nation communities. This article concludes that although it operates under certain judicially imposedconstraints, and without a solid legislative foundation, circle sentencing does have the potential to shift thelocus of decision-making authority in a manner which is consistent with the aspiration of many First Nationcommunities for greater autonomy in the administration of justice.
DisciplinesLaw
Publication DetailsThis article was originally published as McNamara, L, The Locus of Decision-Making Authority in CircleSentencing: The Significance of Criteria and Guidelines, Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 18, 2000,60-114. Original journal available here.
This journal article is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/lawpapers/8
"http:/www.uwindsor.ca/wyaj"http://ro.uow.edu.au/lawpapers/8
THE LOCUS OF DECISION-MAKING AUTHORITY IN CIRCLESENTENCING: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF CRITERIA AND
GUIDELINES*
Luke McNamara**
1. INTRODUCTION
During the 1990s First Nation community participation in the form of “circle
sentencing” has emerged as a significant feature of the Canadian criminal justice
system. Circle sentencing involves the direct participation of community members in
the sentencing of the offender in a manner which combines Aboriginal and non-
Aboriginal processes and norms of justice. Circle sentencing had it origins in the
combined efforts of judges concerned to improve the quality of justice which the
mainstream justice system ‘delivered’ to Aboriginal communities and pressure from
communities to be allowed more input into crucial decisions affecting them. Circle
sentencing aims to reverse the colonial pattern of excluding Aboriginal people and
values from important decision-making functions with respect to the administration of
justice, and instead, invites Aboriginal communities to actively participate in
decisions related to the sentencing of criminal offenders. The practice is currently
employed in various parts of the country, and although it has been used in cases
involving non-Aboriginal offenders, it remains primarily a process adopted in cases
involving Aboriginal offenders.
This article examines the practice of circle sentencing against the background
of the continuing demand by many Aboriginal communities for greater autonomy in
relation to the administration of justice.1 The aim will be to determine the extent to
* Research for this article was conducted with the support of a Canadian Studies Faculty ResearchAward. Thanks to the Canadian High Commission (Canberra), the International Council for CanadianStudies, and the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade for this financialassistance. The Faculty Research Award allowed me to travel to Canada in May-June 1998 andcontributed toward the costs of a second visit to Canada in September-October 1998. I am grateful tothe many people who contributed to the success of these visits by sharing valuable information withme about circle sentencing and other First Nation community justice developments. I am especiallygrateful to Judge Heino Lilles, Harold Gatensby and members of the Southern Lakes JusticeCommittee at Carcross, Chief Richard Sidney, Georgina Sidney and members of the Teslin TlingitCouncil, Julie Jai, Phillip Gibson, Pam Muir, Alex Dewar, Brian McGuigan, Rose Wilson, LarryChartrand, Romola Trebilcock, Rod Carleton, Wes Pue, Paul Chartrand, John Eaton, Ross Green,Kearney Healy, Judge Bria Huculak, Irma Murdock, Judge Linton Smith, David Gullickson, RickFowler, Tim Quigley, Darren Winegarden, Arnold Blackstar, and Bruce Archibald.** BA, LLB (UNSW), LLM (Manitoba). Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Wollongong,Australia. Email: [email protected] This demand has been supported by a number of provincial and national inquiries. See, eg,Aboriginal Justice Inquiry of Manitoba (AJIM), Volume 1: The Justice System and Aboriginal People(Winnipeg: Province of Manitoba, 1991); Law Reform Commission of Canada (LRCC), AboriginalPeoples and Criminal Justice: Equality, Respect and the Search for Justice (Ottawa: LRCC, 1991);
2
which the practice of circle sentencing can be considered to represent a shift away
from the culturally inappropriate and unfair non-Aboriginal sentencing processes
which have historically worked to the disadvantage of Aboriginal people, in favour of
genuine respect for, and meaningful co-operation with, Aboriginal law and justice
values and processes.2 Prompted by a desire to unpack the apparent paradox of the
common characterisation of circle sentencing—a practice ostensibly developed within
judicially determined constraints—as an exercise in First Nation community-based
justice, this article is primarily concerned with examining the implications of circle
sentencing for the locus of decision-making authority in criminal cases involving
Aboriginal offenders. Specifically, it is concerned with determining whether the
practice of circle sentencing has the potential to shift the locus of decision-making
authority from judges within the criminal justice system to participants in the
sentencing circle, drawn primarily from the offender’s community. This issue will be
addressed via an examination of the rules, criteria and guidelines which have been
developed, primarily by judges, for the operation of circle sentencing.
The Canadian judiciary has exerted what might be considered a rather
paradoxical influence on the shape of circle sentencing as a vehicle for Aboriginal
community participation in the task of criminal justice administration. On the one
hand, judges have played a pivotal ‘nurturing’ role in the initiation, fostering and
development of the practice of circle sentencing. As Desjardins J of the New
Brunswick Provincial Court observed in R v Nicholas3 observed:
and Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP), Bridging the Cultural Divide: A Report onAboriginal People and Criminal Justice in Canada (Ottawa: RCAP, 1996).2 Circle sentencing is only one of a number of recent justice initiatives characterised by greaterparticipation and responsibility for First Nation communities, including Elders’ panels, family groupconferencing, and various other community mediation and diversion programs. A notable example ofthe latter is the Teslin Tlingit First Nation’s Peacemaker Court, which has been established based onthe Teslin Tlingit clan system. In March 1995 Justice Canada and the Teslin Tlingit Council signed a“Protocol for the Creation of an Alternative Justice Services Delivery Model” which allows for thediversion of certain offences from the conventional criminal justice system to the Teslin TlingitPeacemaker Court. This article does not make any assumption about the relative significance of circlesentencing when compared with these other community justice initiatives—no comparison isattempted. It is worth noting, however, that different forms of community justice may evolve out ofexperience with circle sentencing. Darren Winegarden, from the Federation of Saskatchewan IndianNations has observed that one of the benefits of circle sentencing for First Nation communities is that ithas opened upon possibilities for communities to identify and pursue other forms of participation in,and responsibility for, justice administration: author interview with Darren Winegarden, Director ofJustice, Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, Saskatoon, 12 June 1998. Judge Bria Huculak hasalso commented on the capacity of sentencing circles to open up a range of community-based justicepossibilities: author interview with Judge Bria Huculak, Provincial Court of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon,9 June 1998. On the other hand, Larry Chartrand has warned that the criminal justice system’sdemonstrated capacity to make “allowances” for Aboriginal communities in the form circle sentencingmight be used to justify opposition to the establishment of autonomous Aboriginal justice systems onthe basis that the deficiencies of the mainstream justice system have been “fixed”: author interviewwith Professor Larry Chartrand, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa, 4 June 1998.3 R v Nicholas, [1996] WCBJ LEXIS 10757 (New Brunswick Provincial Court).
3
... [T]he Criminal Code makes no provision for the use of this particular type of process to
determine sentence. In fact, the Criminal Code makes no provision for any particular type of
sentencing hearing: the foundation for the conventional sentencing hearing as well as for the
use of a sentencing circle (or other alternative forms of sentencing hearing) is case law.4
On the other hand, judges have had primary responsibility for establishing, approving
and enforcing the ‘limits’ of circle sentencing by imposing tests on eligibility and
rules on process.5 This article seeks to illuminate the inquiry as to the locus of
decision-making via an analysis of the rules, criteria and guidelines which have been
developed by judges for the conduct of sentencing circles at both the entry stage of the
process—what cases are eligible for circle sentencing?—and the exit stage—what
bearing do the circle’s deliberations and recommendations have on the final
sentencing disposition?6
Section 2 provides an overview of the context of Aboriginal involvement in
the criminal justice system from which ‘alternatives’ like circle sentencing have
emerged. Section 3 maps out a theoretical framework for this article’s analysis of the
locus of decision-making authority in circle sentencing based on the insights offered
by the concept of legal pluralism. Section 4 outlines the nature of the practice of circle
sentencing, with particular emphasis on the manner in which the practice has taken
shape in the Yukon Territory and the province of Saskatchewan. Section 5 outlines
and examines the rules, criteria and guidelines that have been developed for the use of
circle sentencing. The main aim of this discussion will be to identify the respective
roles played by judges and First Nation communities in the development of these
rules and to examine the implications of these rules for the article’s primary concern
with the locus of decision-making authority. Section 6 briefly considers the
significance for circle sentencing of the addition of s 718.2(e) to the Criminal Code in
1996,7 particularly in light of the recent Supreme Court of Canada decision in R v
Gladue.8 Section 7 summarises the article’s conclusions.
4 Ibid, para 5.5 In addition appellate courts have begun to have an important impact via their handling of appealsagainst sentence in cases where the sentence was determined in a sentencing circle: see LukeMcNamara, “Appellate Court Scrutiny of Circle Sentencing”, Manitoba Law Journal (forthcoming).6 The analysis presented in this article draws on a variety of sources of written information: casereports, government reviews, reports produced by Aboriginal community organisations and publishedsecondary literature. These written sources were supplemented with interviews (during May-June1998) with a number of judges, community representatives and lawyers, involved in facilitatingsentencing circles as part of the criminal court sentencing process. In addition interviews wereconducted with representatives from Aboriginal organisations, officers from relevant territorial,provincial and federal government departments, academics and others with knowledge and expertiseregarding the practice of circle sentencing and/or community justice generally.7 Section 718.2(e) requires sentencing judges to taken into account, inter alia, the principle that “allavailable sanctions other than imprisonment that are reasonable in the circumstances should beconsidered for all offenders, with particular attention to the circumstances of aboriginal offenders”.8 R v Gladue [1999] 1 SCR 688 (Supreme Court of Canada).
4
One final comment is necessary by way of introduction. This article is
concerned with determining whether the practice of circle sentencing does involve a
shift in the locus of decision-making authority, rather than whether any such shift is
desirable from the point of view of the objectives of the Canadian criminal justice
system, or adequate in light of the objectives and aspirations of First Nation
communities in the area of justice administration.9 This point is worth clarifying at the
outset, so as to avoid the appearance that this article assumes that the locus of
decision-making authority is the only consideration relevant to an assessment of the
merits of circle sentencing, or that it has been prepared in ignorance of concerns
which have been raised in a variety of quarters about the practice of circle
sentencing.10 Concerns raised by critics of sentencing circles include the negative
impact of the practice on Aboriginal women (particularly where they are victims in
domestic violence and sexual assault cases), the danger of weighting the process in
favour of the offender and against the victim, the risk of local politics influencing the
process so that it benefits certain families or the local elite in a community, and
doubts about the effectiveness of circle sentencing in terms of reducing rates of crime
and recidivism. In addition, concerns have been expressed that no adequate evaluation
of circle sentencing has yet been undertaken to establish whether there is objective
evidence of the claimed benefits of the practice.11 The focus in this article on the locus
9 An evaluation of this sort would be neither appropriate nor feasible. Certainly as a non-Aboriginal(and non-Canadian) legal academic, I am in no position to undertake any such evaluation—particularlyas I am strongly of the view (as a matter of political and legal opinion) that it is for the Aboriginalpeoples of Canada, in exercise of the collective right to self-determination, to determine the manner inwhich anti-social behaviour and breaches of law are handled in their communities.10 Despite the relative novelty of circle sentencing, there is already a substantial body of criticalliterature which points to perceived weaknesses, problems or dangers in circle sentencing. See, eg,Julian V Roberts and Carol LaPrairie, “Sentencing Circles: Some Unanswered Questions” (1996) 39Criminal Law Quarterly 69; Carol LaPrairie, “Altering Course: New Directions in Criminal Justice –Sentencing Circles and Family Group Conferences” (1995) The Australian and New Zealand Journalof Criminology 78; and Carol LaPrairie, Community Justice or Just Communities? AboriginalCommunities in Search of Justice (Ottawa: Department of Justice, 1994); Mary Crnkovich, “ASentencing Circle” (1996) 36 Journal of Legal Pluralism 159; and Evelyn Zellerer, “Community-Based Justice and Violence Against Women: Issues of Gender and Race” (1996) 20(2) InternationalJournal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 233.11 Consistent with the Saskatchewan Government’s “cautiously supportive” response to the emergenceof circle sentencing (author interview with David Gullickson, Senior Policy Analyst, Policy, Planningand Evaluation Branch, Saskatchewan Justice, Regina, 10 June 1998) the Saskatchewan Department ofJustice has indicated that the practice of circle sentencing should be submitted to thorough evaluation:see Saskatchewan Justice, Policy, Planning and Evaluation Branch, Sentencing Circles: A DiscussionPaper (Regina, Saskatchewan Justice, June 1993). In co-operation with the Canadian JusticeDepartment, Saskatchewan Justice has established data collection processes to facilitate such analysisand evaluation. See Campbell Research Associates, Sentencing Circles – A Review. Prepared for theAboriginal Justice Directorate, Department of Justice Canada (March 1995); and Campbell ResearchAssociates, Sentencing Circle Database: Data Organization and Codebook. Submitted to AboriginalJustice Directorate, Department of Justice Canada (June 1995). Some very preliminary evaluative datais contained in Saskatchewan Justice, Policy, Planning and Evaluation Branch, Aboriginal JusticeStrategy: Interim Report, February 1998 (Regina, Saskatchewan Justice, 1998) (discussed furtherbelow). Bazemore and Griffiths have noted that while evaluation of community justice programs likecircle sentencing is desirable it is necessary to recognise that “Many restorative and community justice
5
of decision-making authority has been adopted with an awareness that this represents
but one of the considerations relevant to any evaluation of the merits of circle
sentencing.
2. BACKGROUND: LAW REFORM RESPONSES TO ABORIGINAL
CRIMINAL JUSTICE EXPERIENCES
It is an undeniable reality that Aboriginal people suffer disproportionately at the hands
of the dominant criminal justice system in post-colonial settler societies such as
Canada. A great deal of energy has been invested during the last decade in confirming
the facts of Aboriginal over-representation, disadvantage and injustice, and in
proposing ‘solutions’ to these problems.
A recurring theme of many of the major public inquiries undertaken during
this time (such as the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples in Canada12) has been
the identification of a causal relationship between the specific forms of injustice
suffered by Aboriginal people at the hands of the dominant criminal justice system
and the more general subordination of Indigenous peoples’ legal authority that
characterised the colonial process and which continues to define European/Indigenous
relations in post-colonial settler states. That is, the suppression of Aboriginal laws and
initiatives have objectives that are far more holistic than traditional crime control responses which havetypically utilized recidivism rates as a primary outcome measure. An evaluative framework for theseapproaches would, therefore, have to include measurable criteria to assess outcomes of ‘communityempowerment and solidarity’, ‘victim interests’ and ‘crime prevention’”: Gordon Bazemore and CurtTaylor Griffiths, “Conferences, Circle, Boards & Mediations: Scouting the ‘New Wave’ of CommunityJustice Decisionmaking Approaches” (1997) [www.cjprimer.com/circles.htm]. See also Judge BarryStuart, “Circle Sentencing in Yukon Territory, Canada: A Partnership of the Community and theCriminal Justice System” (1996) 20 International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminology291 at 293-294. Scepticism on the part of circle sentencing practitioners (including some judges) as towhether government-sponsored evaluation will adequately take these factors into account hascontributed to a reluctance to support government evaluation projects. Bazemore and Griffiths alsostress that the effectiveness of community justice initiatives must be compared with “the reality of thecurrent system rather than an idealized version of its performance”: ibid. Judge Heino Lilles, one of theleading judicial proponents of circle sentencing, has similarly observed that the ‘success’ of circlesentencing must be measured against the demonstrated failure of the conventional criminal justicesystem to deliver justice and reduce crime, particularly in Aboriginal communities: author interviewwith Judge Heino Lilles, Territorial Court of Yukon, Whitehorse, 25 May 1998; see also Heino Lilles,“A Plea for More Humane Values In Our Justice System” (1992) 17 Queen’s LJ 328; and Heino Lilles,“Dawn or Dusk in Sentencing”, paper presented at the Canadian Institute for the Administration ofJustice Conference, Montreal, 24-26 April 1997. Judge Bria Huculak has also argued that measures ofsuccess must be appropriate and realistic. On the question of recidivism rates Judge Huculak haspointed out that it is important to focus not simply on whether individuals reoffend, but whether theycommit offences of the same type and seriousness: author interview with Judge Bria Huculak,Provincial Court of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, 9 June 1998.12 RCAP, op cit.
6
the denial of Aboriginal self-determination underpins contemporary problems of
Aboriginal recidivism and over-representation in the criminal justice system.13
The identification and exploration of this relationship has underpinned the
articulation of an approach to justice reform which eschews the conventional and
inherently limited strategy of merely ‘tinkering’ with, or ‘fine-tuning’ the dominant
principles and institutions of the prevailing (central) regime of non-Aboriginal
criminal law.14 Instead, genuine improvement in the ways in which Aboriginal people
‘experience’ justice is seen to be contingent on a reshaping of the framework for the
resolution of disputes and the maintenance of social order—a reconfiguration of the
acceptable parameters of legitimate social control mechanisms which leaves room for
the operation of Aboriginal laws and values, which is consistent with the exercise of
Aboriginal self-determination, and which demonstrates a commitment to pluralist
justice.
Practical change along these lines has been slow and limited. Moreover,
justice reform based on (varying degrees of) recognition of Aboriginal laws and
processes have tended to occur alongside, rather than as a result of, the concerted
efforts of law reform inquiries such as have been conducted by the Law Reform
Commission of Canada15 the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry of Manitoba16 and the Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.17 That is, the implementation of processes which
acknowledge the legitimacy and relevance of Aboriginal laws, justice values and
processes in criminal cases involving Aboriginal defendants has frequently been an ad
hoc judicial response, in co-operation with particular First Nation communities rather
than a deliberate course of progressive law reform embarked upon by legislatures or
executive governments.18 This is true of circle sentencing. This point is worth making
13 In Australia, the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody reached a similar conclusion.See Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, National Report (Canberra: AustralianGovernment Publishing Service, 1991).14 Luke McNamara, Aboriginal Peoples, the Administration of Justice, and the Autonomy Agenda: AnAssessment of the Status of Criminal Justice Reform in Canada With Reference to the Prairie Region.Research Report No. 4 (Winnipeg: Legal Research Institute of the University of Manitoba, 1993).15 LRCC, op cit.16 AJIM, op cit.17 RCAP, op cit.18 There are exceptions to this general pattern. For example, in the Yukon the Canadian JusticeDepartment (in co-operation with the Yukon Justice Department) is currently negotiating withinterested First Nations over the devolution of responsibility for justice administration in the context ofthe settlement of comprehensive land and self-government claims. One such First Nation is the TeslinTlingit First Nation. In May 1993 tripartite agreement was reached on land (Teslin Tlingit CouncilFinal Agreement (Ottawa, DIAND, 1993)) and self-government (The Teslin Tlingit Council Self-Government Agreement (Ottawa: DIAND, 1993)). Section 13.3.17 of the Self-Government Agreementprovides that “The Teslin Tlingit Council shall have the power to enact laws … in relation to the …administration of justice”. This power will be exercisable commencing in the year 2000. In June 1997negotiations commenced over the terms of the devolution of responsibility for justice administration,and in April 1998 a Framework Agreement on the Process to Negotiate Teslin Tlingit Council JusticeAgreements was completed. The objectives of the Teslin Tlingit Council, as outlined in the frameworkagreement, include the establishment of a Teslin Tlingit Council Court which will incrementally
7
at the outset because it does indicate that there is frequently considerable distance
between the agenda and mechanics of ‘mainstream’ law reform on the one hand, and
on the other, the means by which actual change occurs—particularly in the area of
community justice.
3. LEGAL PLURALISM: AN ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK FOR
EXAMINING ABORIGINAL COMMUNITY JUSTICE
In the context of examinations of the experience of Indigenous peoples under the legal
and governmental systems of post-colonial settler states, the term ‘legal pluralism’ is
commonly used to denote a desired (or less commonly, achieved) state of affairs
characterised by a ‘fair and just’ relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
legal systems rather than continuation of the colonial pattern of subordination of
Indigenous legal cultures.19 What this brief account of the significance of the term
‘legal pluralism’ does not reveal is that the concept of legal pluralism is controversial
and contested—it is a concept which provokes strong reaction on the part of both
adherents and critics. Therefore, before considering the utility of the concept as a
framework for examining the practice of Aboriginal community based justice in the
form of circle sentencing, further consideration of the concept of legal pluralism is
necessary.
Divergent views as to the utility of the concept reflect, in part, different
definitions of the term, and the manner in which the concept has evolved. While it
would be simplistic to reduce the debate to a disagreement over semantics, any
consideration of the concept of legal pluralism must begin with the fundamental and
complex question of definition.
The concept of legal pluralism has been variously explained in the literature.
Manderson has succinctly stated that “In its simplest form, legal pluralism posits that
more than one legal order inhabits the same physical territory”.20 According to Merry
legal pluralism is “generally defined as a situation in which two or more legal systems
coexist in the same social field. ... Recent work defines ‘legal system’ broadly to
include the system of courts and judges supported by the state as well as nonlegal
forms of normative ordering. ... Thus, virtually every society is legally plural.”21 In a
similar vein Griffiths has observed that “Legal pluralism is an attribute of a social
assume responsibility for justice administration functions within the jurisdiction of the Teslin TlingitCouncil.19 See RCAP, op cit, 233.20 Desmond Manderson, “Beyond the Provincial: Space, Aesthetics, and Modernist Legal Theory”(1996) 20 Melbourne University Law Review 1048 at 1059.21 Sally Engle Merry, “Legal Pluralism” (1988) Law and Society Review 869 at 871.
8
field and not of ‘law’ or of a ‘legal system’. ... It is when in a social field more than
one source of ‘law’, more than one ‘legal order’, is observable, that the social order of
that field can be said to exhibit legal pluralism. ... [L]egal pluralism is a universal
feature of social organization.”22 Sack offers the important additional insights that
“Legal pluralism is more than the acceptance of a plurality of law; it sees this plurality
as a positive force to be utilised—and controlled—rather than eliminated. Legal
pluralism thus involves an ideological commitment.”23
Critiques of the concept of legal pluralism (both sympathetic and hostile) have
come from a variety of perspectives. For example, Tamanaha has argued that “the
concept of legal pluralism is constructed upon an unstable analytical foundation
which will ultimately lead to its demise.”24 Specifically, Tamanaha takes issue with
what he characterises as the “threshold flaw” of legal pluralism: the core notion that
the “legal system” includes “non-legal forms of normative ordering.”25 For Tamanaha
“so generous a view of what law is”26 is unacceptable because the term “‘law’ thereby
lose[s] any distinctive meaning.”27 Put simply, Tamanaha’s criticism of legal
pluralism reflects his view that the term ‘law’ should only be used to refer to state
law, not non-state normative orders. Even if this critique is meritorious in particular
contexts (eg Tamanaha uses the extreme example of “table manners” as a set of rules
which should not be described as ‘law’) it by no means follows that the rules and
social values of Aboriginal peoples cannot accurately and appropriately be described
as ‘law’. Tamanaha’s approach carries a great risk of perpetuating the colonial
ideology and practices which saw Aboriginal legal systems denigrated and
subordinated as (at best) ‘lore’ and ‘custom’.
From a very different perspective Maori lawyer Moana Jackson has criticised
the concept of legal pluralism on the basis that it “is inherently assimilative and
racist.”28 In particular Jackson is critical of the belated, selective and carefully
circumscribed manner in which laws, values and rights of Indigenous peoples have
been acknowledged by the colonising state under the guise of ‘legal pluralism’ so that
colonial domination is continued rather than rejected via the state’s formal embrace of
legal pluralism.29 Arguably, Jackson’s concerns about legal pluralism relate less to its
22 John Griffiths, “What is Legal Pluralism?” (1986) 24 Journal of Legal Pluralism 1 at 38.23 Peter Sack, “Legal Pluralism: Introductory Comments” in Peter Sack and Elizabeth Minchin (eds),Legal Pluralism: Proceedings of the Canberra Law Workshop VII (Canberra: Law Department,Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, 1988), 1.24 Brian Tamanaha, “The Folly of the ‘Social Scientific’ Concept of Legal Pluralism” (1993) 20(2)Journal of Law and Society 192.25 Ibid, 193 quoting Merry, op cit, 870 (emphasis added by Tamanaha).26 Ibid.27 Ibid.28 Moana Jackson, “Changing Realities: Unchanging Truths” (1994) 10 Australian Journal of Law andSociety 115 at 116.29 Ibid.
9
utility as a concept for exploring and investigating the existence of a range of
normative orders within a society (including Indigenous legal systems) than to the
appropriation of the language of ‘legal pluralism’ by post-colonial states as a vehicle
for continuing the colonial project of marginalisation and subordination of Indigenous
peoples’ legal values, rules and institutions.
What these various formulations of (and judgements on) the concept of legal
pluralism reveal is a diversity of opinions on both the nature and value of the concept.
Does it refer to the political aspirations of oppressed minorities, and in particular
Indigenous peoples who have suffered under colonisation? Does it merely refer to the
multiplicity of normative orders in any society? If so, is it simply an empirical label,
without political significance? Or does the ideology of opposition to ‘legal centrism’
have practical implications for law and law reform? Is it a rhetorical (and frequently
misleading) assertion on the part of the state about the capacity of the dominant legal
system to deliver justice to minority groups? Is it a ‘vehicle’ for the continuation of
the colonial project?
The answer for present purposes—that is, the relationship between Aboriginal
law and processes and state criminal law and processes in Canada—is that the term
legal pluralism is of some relevance in all these respects. But this does not sufficiently
address the divergence in meaning. To this end, regard must be had to the evolution of
the concept of legal pluralism in legal anthropology. As Merry has observed:
The intellectual odyssey of the concept of legal pluralism moves from the discovery of
indigenous forms of law among remote African villagers and New Guinea tribesmen to
debates concerning the pluralistic qualities of law under advanced capitalism. In the last
decade, the concept of legal pluralism has been applied to the study of social and legal
ordering in urban industrial societies, primarily the United States, Britain, and France. Indeed,
given a sufficiently broad definition of the term legal system, virtually every society is legally
plural, whether or not it has a colonial past. Legal pluralism is a central theme in the
reconceptualization of the law/society relation.30
Within this process of evolution and development, Merry identifies two phases
of legal pluralism. The first, “classic legal pluralism”, was concerned with “the
analysis of the intersections of indigenous and European law” in colonial and post-
colonial contexts. The second, “new legal pluralism”, espouses that “plural normative
orders are found in virtually all societies”.31
30 Merry, op cit, 869; see also Manderson, op cit, 1059.31 Merry, op cit, 872.
10
Upon this classic/new paradigm it is possible to superimpose a distinction that
has been drawn between the “juristic” view of legal pluralism and the “social science”
view of legal pluralism. The former is said to be concerned with the particular terms
of the formal relationship (that is, as reflected in the state legal system) between
Indigenous law and the imposed law of the coloniser. The latter is a descriptive theory
for identifying an empirical state of affairs.
For Griffiths the former is, at best, only a ‘weak’ version of legal pluralism,
because it offers no challenge to the ideology of “legal centralism”. By contrast the
“social science” version of legal pluralism is legal pluralism in the ‘strong’ sense. It
aims to
break the stranglehold of the idea that what law is, is a single, unified and exclusive
hierarchical normative ordering depending from the power of the state, and of the illusion that
the legal world actually looks the way such a conception requires it to look.32
Given its association with what leading scholars of legal pluralism have
characterised as the ‘classic’ and ‘weak’ notion of legal pluralism (with implications
of inferiority, irrelevance and anachronism) it is perhaps not surprisingly that the
question of the status of the laws and legal systems of Indigenous peoples within post-
colonial states is presently a somewhat unfashionable focus for analyses from the
perspective of contemporary legal pluralism. This is unfortunate for two reasons.
First, even if, for the sake of argument, the ascendancy of the social science
view of legal pluralism is conceded, Indigenous peoples and their normative orders
are not thereby disqualified as appropriate fields of inquiry for proponents of this
‘new’ legal pluralism. Aboriginal law (encompassing both substantive rules as well as
processes) is a matter of empirical reality for First Nation peoples in Canada,
irrespective of whether the relevant state legal system can be said to be pluralist in the
juristic sense. Therefore, the nature of contemporary Aboriginal law and its
relationship with other forms of law (including state criminal law) need not be
considered ‘off-limits’ by those concerned with legal pluralism in the ‘strong sense’.
Second, the rise of ‘new’ legal pluralism need not signal the complete demise
of its ‘classic’ equivalent. While it may be fair to say that “legal pluralism goes far
deeper than the joining of European and traditional forms of law”33 it by no means
follows that legal pluralism has outgrown its utility as a concept for exploring the
Indigenous/coloniser relationship. Indeed, there are good reasons why, particularly in
relation to analyses of contemporary struggles by Indigenous people over law and
32 Griffiths, op cit, 4-5.33 Merry, op cit, 870.
11
justice issues, the nexus between classic/new, juristic/social science, and weak/strong
should not be severed. For example, the concept of legal pluralism in the juristic sense
highlights the reality of state power and coercion, which underscored the
Indigenous/coloniser relationship and which continues to underscore the
Indigenous/post-colonial state relationship. As Manderson has observed, “The first
stage of ‘modern pluralism’ [ie Merry’s classic legal pluralism] was motivated by a
clear political agenda ... Whether in colonial societies, Brazil or the inner city,
‘pluralism’ stood for resistance to the established legal order”.34 The social science
version of legal pluralism tends to underemphasise this factor—deliberately, it would
seem, but nonetheless problematically.35 As Alan Hunt has observed, while it is
important to “recognize the diversity of legal phenomena and avoid falling into the
presumption of a unitary entity ‘the Law’”, it is also important “to give due
recognition to the importance of both the state as a political agency and to state-law.”36
More specifically Hunt has emphasised the need to “address the specific articulation
between state-law and non-state law”.37
Given the concerns of this article—the relationship between state criminal
laws and processes, and the criminal laws and processes of First Nations, with specific
reference to the practice of circle sentencing—it seems necessary and appropriate to
consider the utility of the concept of legal pluralism in two senses. First, the concept
of legal pluralism is useful as a social descriptor—for identifying and highlighting the
multiplicities of laws/normative orders operating in a given context. Second, legal
pluralism has value as a legal ‘barometer’—for characterising the relationship
between Indigenous laws and state laws, so that it is possible to speak of the presence
or absence of legal pluralism (in lesser or greater degrees) in any given state’s legal
system, or specifically, system of criminal justice administration.
Utilisation of the concept in both these respects has important benefits from
the point of view of facilitating a constructive analysis of community justice
initiatives such as circle sentencing: the versions can be mutually compatible rather
than contradictory or mutually exclusive. For example, as a social descriptor, legal
pluralism is a valuable tool for breaking down the law/lore distinction which has
hindered acceptance of the authenticity and legitimacy of Indigenous laws and justice
processes. As a legal barometer, legal pluralism arguably offers greater political
currency in that it constitutes a measure for assessing the capacity of existing legal
34 Manderson, op cit, 1060.35 Thanks to Paul Havemann for first prompting this insight.36 Alan Hunt, Explorations in Law and Society: Toward a Constitutive Theory of Law (New York:Routledge, 1993), 307.37 Ibid, 323.
12
regimes to deliver justice to Indigenous people, using criteria including the degree of
compatibility with Indigenous laws and processes.
Of course, in suggesting that legal pluralism can be used as a measure of
‘justice’ for Indigenous people, including in the context of criminal law, it will be
crucial what criteria are employed in any such assessment. Williams has noted that “a
facade of legal pluralism may conceal a reality of monocultural legal domination” and
issued “a warning for scholars to be cautious in their analysis of attempts by a modern
state legal system to operate in a pluralistic manner.38 Mindful of this warning, this
article will utilise the concept of legal pluralism as an analytical perspective from
which to examine the practice of circle sentencing.
At first glance, the concept of legal pluralism and the practice of circle
sentencing may not appear to have much in common. One might ask, ‘surely a
practice which is only concerned with determining the sentence for a criminal offence
and not liability for the criminal offence, and where the judge retains ultimate
decision-making authority, can’t be considered an illustration of legal pluralism’. This
may be a reasonable conclusion but it is an unsatisfactory presumption or starting
point. This article aims to closely and critically examine the rules which have been
developed to ‘shape’ the practice of circle sentencing, in order to establish a
foundation for answering a key question: to what extent does circle sentencing
involve a significant shift in the site of decision-making authority out of the hands of
judges and the mainstream criminal justice system, and into the hands of First Nation
communities. This task is undertaken will full recognition of the inherent paradox of
reform strategies which attempt to recognise Aboriginal authority over law and justice
matters within the parameters of the non-Aboriginal legal system. A detailed
understanding of the terms of the resulting compromise is necessary in order to
evaluate the significance of the emergence of circle sentencing as an established
feature of the Canadian criminal justice system.
4. THE ORIGINS AND CURRENT PRACTICE OF CIRCLE SENTENCING
In its 1996 report on the criminal justice system, Bridging the Cultural Divide, the
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples simply but accurately described circle
sentencing as a meeting where “individuals are invited to sit in a circle with the
accused and discuss together what sentences should be imposed”.39 This description
38 David Williams, “The Recognition of ‘Native Custom’ in Tanganyika and New Zealand — LegalPluralism or Monocultural Imposition” in Sack & Minchin, op cit, 152. See also David Williams, “TheWaitangi Tribunal and Legal Pluralism: A Reassessment” (1994) 10 Australian Journal of Law andSociety 195; and Jackson, op cit.39 RCAP, op cit, 110.
13
effectively conveys the ‘bare bones’ of what happens in sentencing circles, but of
course it does not reveal the considerable variations—court to court, community to
community, and case to case—in the forms of the practice of circle sentencing which
have been employed in many communities across Canada in recent years. In a similar
vein, the purpose of the overview of the origins and practice of circle sentencing
which is offered in this section of the article is not to provide a comprehensive
account of how circle sentencing works,40 but to establish a basis for consideration of
particular aspects of the process of circle sentencing in the remainder of this article.
By necessity then, the account of circle sentencing will be generalised in nature.
The recent origins of the practice of circle sentencing can be found in the
Yukon where it was initiated in 1992 by Judge Barry Stuart of the Yukon Territorial
Court in co-operation with a number of First Nation communities across the
territory.41 The motivation for Stuart J (and subsequently other judges in the territory,
including Judge Heino Lilles) and members of First Nation communities deciding to
look for alternatives was simple: overwhelming evidence that the conventional
criminal justice process was failing, nowhere more dismally than in those First Nation
communities ‘serviced’ by circuit courts. As Stuart J observed in R v Moses42 — the
first circle sentencing convened in the Canadian criminal justice system and the
prototypes on which many sentencing circles across the country have been modelled
— “no one can contend ‘circuit court’s work’; no one can deny that the system
squanders money and lives unnecessarily with dubious success in either protecting or
improving the community.”43
The sentencing circle format, then, was developed as an alternative to the
conventional (and demonstrably ineffective) sentencing hearing where the judge, after
hearing submissions from Crown and defence counsel and considering reports and/or
testimony from relevant experts and other interested parties, makes a decision on
his/her own and imposes a sentence on the offender. Participants in a sentencing circle
40 For a detailed explanation of circle sentencing by the judge who initiated the practice in co-operationwith First Nation communities in the Yukon, see Barry Stuart, Building Community JusticePartnerships: Community Peacemaking Circles (Ottawa: Aboriginal Justice Learning Network, JusticeCanada, 1997); and Stuart (1996), op cit. See also Ross Gordon Green, Justice in AboriginalCommunities: Sentencing Alternatives (Saskatoon: Purich Publishing, 1998), chapter 5 “TheSentencing Circle”.41 Some of the factors regarding the administration of justice in the Yukon Territory which haveprompted judges of the Yukon Territorial Court (particularly Stuart and Lilles JJ) to encouragecommunity-based approaches to sentencing in First Nation communities are outlined by Stuart J in R vN(D) (1993), 27 CR (4th) 114 at 127-32.42 R v Moses (1992), 71 CCC (3d) 347 (Yukon Territorial Court).43 Ibid, 384. For a similar characterisation of the circuit court system in northern Saskatchewan, seeJudge Claude Fafard in Maureen Nicholson (ed), Justice and Northern Families: In Crisis … InHealing … In Control (Vancouver: The Northern Justice Society and Simon Fraser University, 1994)53; and Green, op cit, 38-42.
14
usually include the offender, the judge,44 the victim, the prosecutor and the
defendant’s lawyer, along with a cross-section of the community (including family
members of the offender and the victim). The objective of the process is to allow for
direct community involvement in the sentencing process, with a view to arriving at an
appropriate sentence, which reflects, where achieved, the consensus view of the circle.
While circle sentencing involves a conscious departure from a number of the
practices which define the conventional style of sentencing, it remains, formally and
legally, a sentencing hearing within the court system. Consequently, certain
procedures are retained, including the receipt and marking as exhibits of criminal
record documentation or other reports, the recording or proceedings, the judicial
determination of disputed facts “in the usual manner through evidence heard under
oath” and the openness of the proceedings to the public.45
Consistent with the consultative and community-based nature of the process,
circle sentencing necessitates a physical rearrangement of the court room. In Moses,
Stuart J explained the rationale for altering the physical layout of the courtroom:
In any decision-making process, power, control, the over-all atmosphere and dynamics are
significantly influenced by the physical setting, and especially by the places accorded to
participants. … In the criminal justice process … the physical arrangement in a court-room
profoundly affects who participates and how they participate. The organization of the court-
room influences the content, scope and importance of information provided to the court. The
rules governing the court hearing reinforce the allocation of power and influence fostered by
the physical setting. The combined effect of the rules and the court-room arrangements
entrench the adversarial nature of the process. The judge, defence and Crown counsel,
fortified by their prominent places in the court-room and by the rules, own and control the
process and no one in the court-room can have any doubt about that.46
Of course, the departure from the conventional sentencing hearing which
circle sentencing represents involves more than merely altering the seating
arrangements, but according to Stuart J this simple change was the catalyst for a
significant change in the sentencing decision-making process. Stuart J explained that,
in Moses, when the physical arrangement of the courtroom was altered so that all
participants were sitting “in a circle without desks or tables … the dynamics of the
decision-making process were profoundly changed.”47
44 The terms ‘circle sentencing’ is sometimes used to refer to a community consultation where thejudge does not attend or participate in the circle but receives and considers a sentencingrecommendation from the circle.45 R v Gingell (1996), 50 CR (4th) 326 (Yukon Territorial Court) per Lilles J.46 Moses, op cit, 355.47 Ibid, 356.
15
Word of this new approach to doing justice in First Nation communities soon
spread, to other parts of the Yukon and to other provinces. Harold Gatensby, member
of the Carcross Tagish First Nation’s Justice Committee,48 has explained that when
Judge Stuart suggested that circle sentencing be conducted in the Carcross community
there was immediate enthusiasm for the idea and a desire to start immediately, such
was the extent of the community’s need.49 Gatensby has stated:
People ask, “How do you get started? We don’t have the funding. We don’t have the
resources. What do you do?” What we did in our community was we put all the chairs in a
circle and sat down. That is all. And it works.50
Apart from the Yukon Territory, the jurisdiction in which circle sentencing has
been most widely used is the province of Saskatchewan. The first Saskatchewan
sentencing circle was held in July 1992 in the community of Sandy Bay in a case in
the Provincial Court of Saskatchewan presided over by Fafard J.51 Fafard J made the
initial suggestion, which was supported by members of the community.52 Fafard J has
reported that he first heard of Stuart J’s use of circle sentencing via a newspaper
account of the Moses case and “The idea appealed to me right off the bat”.53
One of the community participants in the first circle held at Sandy Bay has
explained the approach adopted at the inception of circle sentencing:
Well, we just kind of played it by ear. There was no set guidelines or nothing. We just said
“Okay, we’ll deal with him, [the offender].” ... [We got] a good mix of people, some young,
middle-aged, elders, the RCMP, the magistrate [judge], ... the accused and his family. And we
just hacked it out ... But, instead of looking at punishing the guy, we looked at what’s causing
him to do these things.54
The practice of circle sentencing (in a variety of forms) has since been adopted
and adapted by criminal courts and Aboriginal communities in many parts of the
country, and has been described by the Chief Justice of the Saskatchewan Court of
48 Now known as the Southern Lakes Justice Committee.49 See “Circles” (National Film Board of Canada, 1997).50 Harold Gatensby, in Nicholson, op cit, 16.51 See R v Joseyounen, [1996] 1 CNLR 182 at 183. See also Green, op cit, 95-101.52 See Green, op cit, 96. Fafard J has commented that “The idea, of course, belongs to the Nativepeople from time immemorial. So, we shouldn’t give too much credit to the judges!”: in Nicholson, opcit, 50.53 Fafard J in Nicholson, op cit, 50.54 Harry Morin, quoted in Green, op cit, 96.
16
Appeal as “part of the fabric of our system of criminal justice and ... a recognized and
accepted procedure”.55
In Moses Stuart J identified a number of benefits of circle sentencing as a mode
of decision-making,56 including that it:
• challenges the monopoly of professionals;
• enhances the range and quality of information on which a sentencing decision
can be made;
• increases the likelihood that creation sentencing options will be identified;
• promotes shared responsibility for the making and implementation of
sentencing decisions;
• encourages offender and victim participation in the sentencing decision;
• facilitates improved understanding of the limitations of the conventional justice
system;
• broadens the conventional criminal justice system’s narrow focus on the
conduct of the offender;
• encourages identification of productive ways to use community resources; and
• involves greater recognition of Aboriginal cultures and values.
This final benefit identified by Stuart J is of particular relevance here given that this
article is concerned with examining circle sentencing through the lens of legal
pluralism. In Moses Stuart J explained this benefit of circle sentencing as follows:
Aboriginal culture does not place as high a premium on individual responsibility or approach
conflict in the direct confrontational manner championed by our adversarial process.
Aboriginal people see value in avoiding confrontation and in refraining from speaking
publicly against each other. In dealing with conflict, emphasis is placed on reconciliation, the
restoration of harmony and the removal of underlying pressures generating conflict. … The
circle contributes the basis for developing a genuine partnership between aboriginal
communities and the justice system by according the flexibility for both sets of values to
influence the decision-making process in sentencing.57
The choice of the circle as the conceptual, physical and procedural framework for the
reworking of criminal justice administration by circuit courts in the Yukon was not
accidental. That the circle carries philosophical, spiritual and cultural significance for
55 Chief Justice Bayda, in R v Morin, [1995] 4 CNLR 37 (Saskatchewan Court of Appeal) at 68, 69.56 See Moses, op cit, 357-67. See Hugh J Benevides, “R v Moses and Sentencing Circles: A CaseComment” (1994) Dalhousie J of Legal Studies 241; and Kathleen Makela, “Case Summary: R vMoses”, Justice as Healing (Spring 1995) [also at http://www.usask.ca/nativelaw/jah_makela.htm.] .57 Moses, op cit, 366-67.
17
many First Nations in Canada is widely recognised. What has been more controversial
is whether the circle sentencing is appropriately seen as a product of First Nations’
legal cultures based on ‘traditional’ methods of dispute resolution and decision-
making in Aboriginal communities, or alternatively, whether circle sentencing is more
accurately characterised as the creation of a progressive minority within the Canadian
judiciary? In a political context where sentencing circles have been depicted by some
critics as a ‘soft option’ designed to allow Aboriginal offenders to ‘get off easy’,58
questions about the ‘cultural authenticity’ of circle sentencing have implications
beyond the issue of anthropological accuracy.
A number of commentators have emphasised the connections between First
Nations’ cultures and circle sentencing. The Royal Commission on Aboriginal
Peoples described the introduction of circle sentencing as “a decision to return, in a
fashion, to the way justice was done before the arrival of the non-Aboriginal legal
system. The return to more traditional approaches [has] led to an opening up of the
sentencing process to greater community input”.59 Similarly, Tim Quigley has
described sentencing circles as an example of “the rejuvenation of procedures and, to
some extent, dispositions traditionally practised by some Aboriginal Peoples in this
country”.60 Larry Chartrand has explained, that “the very purpose of the circle
sentencing process … is to have the aboriginal community regain a measure of control
over the justice system in a manner more conducive to its traditional methods of
dispute resolution.”61 More cautiously, Curt Taylor Griffiths has noted, “Restorative
justice initiatives in Aboriginal communities [such as circle sentencing] may be, but
are not necessarily, premised on customary law and traditional practices”.62
On the other hand, Carol LaPrairie, a prominent critic of sentencing circles,
has argued that sentencing circles are “not aboriginal-community driven but the
58 See, eg, Donella Hoffman, “Easy Time? Debating Sentencing Circles”, The [Saskatoon]StarPhoenix, 19 September 1995, A1; “Sentencing circle ruling helps man side-step jail”, The[Saskatoon] StarPhoenix, 12 January 1995, B6; Sean Fine, “Consensus sentencing a controversial toolin aboriginal trials”, The [Toronto] Globe and Mail, 31 May 1995, A3. See also Judge CunliffeBarnett, “Circle Sentencing/Alternative Sentencing” [1995] 3 CNLR 1 at 4 where Judge Barnett, of theProvincial Court of British Columbia and a judicial proponent of circle sentencing, observes that“Some persons believe that the real purpose of alternative sentencing endeavours is to shelter Nativeoffenders (usually male) from the full force of the law. They believe that alternative sentencing therebyfails to protect victims (usually Native women). There is sometimes too much truth to these beliefs …”59 RCAP, op cit.60 Tim Quigley, “Some Issues in Sentencing of Aboriginal Offenders” in Richard Gosse, JamesYoungblood Henderson and Roger Carter (eds), Continuing Poundmaker & Riel’s Quest:Presentations Made at a Conference on Aboriginal Peoples and Justice (Saskatoon: Purich Publishingand the College of Law, University of Saskatchewan, 1994) 269 at 287.61 Larry Chartrand, “The Appropriateness of the Lawyer as Advocate in Contemporary AboriginalJustice Initiatives” (1995) 33(4) Alberta Law Review 874 at 878.62 Curt Taylor Griffiths, “Sanctioning and Healing: Restorative Justice in Canadian AboriginalCommunities” (1996) 20(2) International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 195 at200. See also Green, op cit; and Craig Proulx, Interrogating Justice: A Cultural Critique (MA Thesis,University of Western Ontario, 1997).
18
innovation of certain reform-minded judges.”63 This criticism assumes, rather
simplistically, that judicial initiation is necessarily inconsistent with community
ownership. The example of the development of circle sentencing in the Carcross First
Nation, discussed above, illustrates that this need not be so. Of course, it is crucial, as
Harold Gatensby has noted,64 that community justice initiatives such as circle
sentencing be based in the community. However, the mere fact that a particular
initiative develops out of the suggestion of a judge is hardly an insurmountable barrier
to this occurring. What is crucial is whether the community is receptive to the
suggestion and how the project subsequently takes shape. As Judge Heino Lilles has
observed, with reference to the importance of community ownership, “it is imperative
that those individuals involved in initiating the project give up control, share credit
with others and constantly reinforce the initiative as one belonging to and involving
the whole community”. 65
Other commentators have questioned the ready assumption that community-
based justice initiatives are necessarily a product of an Aboriginal people’s culture.
For example, Mary Crnkovich has observed, with specific reference to the Inuit of
northern Québec:
There appears to be some confusion between Inuit-based and community-based justice
initiatives. The fact that Inuit are the majority within the community does not necessarily
make a community-based initiative an Inuit-based initiative. In fact very few of the
community-based initiatives are rooted in Inuit tradition. Adult diversion and circle
sentencing are not Inuit traditions. For alternatives to be Inuit-based, Inuit must be allowed to
design and implement them. Those within the justice system who endorse alternatives must be
willing to allow their models to be reconstructed to reflect Inuit values and traditions.66
Certainly, the point that it is important to avoid any tendency towards
overgeneralisation and homogenisation when considering distinctive and diverse
Aboriginal legal cultures is well made. However, it is equally clear that a number of
First Nations do see circle sentencing as having its origins in their culture. For
63 Carol LaPrairie, “Sentencing Circles and Family Group Conferences: Response to Jenny Bargen”(1996) 29 (1) The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology 74.64 Author interview with Harold Gatensby, Southern Lakes Justice Committee, Carcross, 26 May 1998.65Lilles, op cit (1997) p 15. Arnold Blackstar of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations hasobserved that community justice initiatives which remain ‘judge driven’ are unlikely to ‘take root’ inthe community: author interview with Arnold Blackstar, Director of Community Services, Federationof Saskatchewan Indian Nations, Saskatoon, 12 June 1998.66 Crnkovich, op cit, 174.
19
example, in R v C (LM)67 the mediator of the circle, Morris Little Wolf from the
Peigan band, testified that the process had been used for over 500 years.68
Judicial opinions on the topic vary considerably, even amongst strong
advocates and active proponents of circle sentencing. For example, Judge Bria
Huculak, one of the Provincial Court judges heavily involved in the development of
circle sentencing in northern Saskatchewan, has stated that “the use of sentencing
circles in Saskatchewan was primarily a judicial initiative, in that the judges
encouraged, promoted and developed the procedural framework for the process.”69
Judge Linton Smith, also of the Provincial Court of Saskatchewan, has argued, based
on his experience with First Nation communities in the southern part of the province,
that there is a significant relationship between circles and Aboriginal culture and has
emphasised the spiritual dimension of the process of circle sentencing.70
Despite such differences of opinion, it if fair to say that a significant number
of judges in various parts of the country have (at a minimum) effectively taken
‘judicial notice’ of the origins of circle sentencing in First Nations’ legal cultures. For
example, in R v Morin Bayda CJ emphasised the long history and cultural origins of
circle sentencing:
The sentencing circle has its genesis in the healing circle which from time immemorial has
been a part of the culture of many First Nations of Canada and of the indigenous peoples of
other countries. … The circle was premised on two fundamental notions: first, the wrongful
act was a breach of the relationship between the wrongdoer and the victim and a breach of the
relationship between the wrongdoer and the community; and second, the well-being of the
community and consequently the protection of its members and the society generally
depended not upon retribution or punishment of the wrongdoer, but upon “healing” the
breaches of the two relationships. The emphasis was primarily, if not entirely, upon a
restorative justice or healing approach as distinct from a retributive or punitive approach.71
67 R v C (LM) (unreported, 1 September 1995, Alberta Youth Court, Jacobsen J).68 See R v Manyfingers (1996), 191 AR 342 at 358. See also Proulx, op cit, 67, who concludes that“Sentencing circles ... have a long history among some Aboriginal peoples in North America,including the Peigan (Blackfoot), Cree, Ojibwa and Maliseet peoples”.69 Author interview with Judge Bria Huculak, Provincial Court of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, 9 June1998. Judge Huculak also expressed the view that “sentencing circles cannot be separatedmeaningfully from the desire on the part of First Nations for self-determination,” and has elsewhereobserved that “The involvement of the community [via sentencing circles] validates aboriginalcommunity values with the current [criminal justice] system: Bria Huculak, “From the power to punishto the power to heal”, Justice as Healing (Fall 1995) 1 at 3.70 Author interview with Judge Linton Smith, Provincial Court of Saskatchewan, Regina, 10 June 1998.71 Morin, op cit, 67.
20
Similarly, in R v Rich (No 1)72 O’Regan J in the Newfoundland Supreme Court
observed that “The concept of ‘sentencing circles’ is new and innovative for the
courts. The concept, however, has been traditionally used by Aboriginal and Native
people throughout the country.”73
For Judge Barry Stuart sentencing circles are best seen as a ‘hybrid’ born of
co-operation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal legal cultures:
The partnerships formed with Yukon Community Peacemaking and Sentencing Circles draw
heavily upon Aboriginal concepts of peacemaking and the practices typically found in
mediation and consensus-building processes. Community Circles are neither wholly western,
nor Aboriginal, but combine principles and practices from both in creating a community-
based process to respond to conflict in a manner that advances the well-being of individuals,
families and the community.74
Ultimately attempts to ‘locate’ sentencing circles within or without
‘traditional’ Aboriginal cultures miss the point. A much more relevant and
constructive line of inquiry is to explore the nature and extent of the embrace and
ownership of this (and other) alternative justice processes by contemporary First
Nation communities. From this point of view, comments such as the following, from
Harold Gatensby of the Carcross Tagish First Nation, are telling: “This sentencing
circle is our people’s way.”75 Such comments confirm that the appropriate questions as
to the relationship between circle sentencing and Aboriginal cultures should be about
acceptance and compatibility rather than authenticity.76
On the question of compatibility, one of the points which has been made on
numerous occasions is that circle sentencing places a greater emphasis on restorative
justice rather than the retributivist approach of conventional sentencing, and that this
72 R v Rich (No 1), [1994] 4 CNLR 167.73 Ibid, 170.74 Stuart (1997), op cit, 4. Judge Heino Lilles, also of the Yukon Territorial Court, has similarlyemphasised the importance of judge-community partnership: author interview with Judge HeinoLilles, Territorial Court of Yukon, Whitehorse, 25 May 1998. See also Nicholas, op cit, para 27 perDesjardins J.75 Gatensby in Nicholson, op cit, 16.76 The importance of the distinction is illustrated in the observation by Alphonse Janvier that “Theconcept of the sentencing circle in the existing justice system will never replace the traditionalMétis/Indian circle of resolving conflict, and I will argue that to the last day; however, I stronglysupport the concept of the sentencing circle being used in the justice system … It gives the communitythe opportunity to have a say in what healing takes place and how the healing should be done”:Alphonse Janvier, “Sentencing Circles” in Richard Gosse, James Youngblood Henderson and RogerCarter (eds), Continuing Poundmaker & Riel’s Quest: Presentations Made at a Conference onAboriginal Peoples and Justice (Saskatoon: Purich Publishing and the College of Law, University ofSaskatchewan, 1994) 301 at 301-302.
21
emphasis is characteristic of Aboriginal conceptions of justice.77 As Fafard J observed
in R v Joseyounen:
The aim of sentencing circles is the same as it is when the disposition is arrived at by other
means: the protection of society by curtailing the commission of the crime by the offenders
and others. However, in sentencing circles the emphasis is less on deterrence and more on re-
integration into society, rehabilitation, and a restoration of harmony within the community.78
Fafard J observed that such an approach to dispute resolution and sanctioning of anti-
social behaviour was more compatible with Aboriginal conceptions of justice and
traditional methods of dispute resolution.79
It is important to recognise, however, that not all so-called ‘restorative justice’
approaches are necessarily applicable to a particular First Nation community merely
because they are considered to have their origins in an Indigenous culture. The recent
case of R v McKay80 provides a good illustration of the dangers of over-generalisation,
homogenisation and essentialisation in the context of reforms aimed at the
incorporation of Aboriginal peoples’ values and processes into the criminal justice
system.
In the reported judgement in McKay Reilly J, in the Alberta Provincial Court
observed, in a way reminiscent of many judges who have become involved in
Aboriginal community justice that based on a realisation that “justice will work better
for the aboriginal when they participate in the process” the judge decided to
“encourage the use of Aboriginal Sentencing Circles”.81 However, rather than engage
in the discussions with community representatives which have commonly preceded
the implementation of circle sentencing in other locations, to this end, Reilly J
attended a presentation on Family Group Conferencing by John McDonald and David
Moore of Transformative Justice Australia82 and arranged for training to be conducted
in the First Nation communities where he sat as a circuit court judge. In McKay Reilly
J observed that while the case itself was unremarkable, “[t]he manner in which the
accused is being sentenced is remarkable because it is the first time in this jurisdiction
that I have used the process known as Family Group Conferencing.”83
77 See, eg, AJIM, op cit, ch 2.78 Joseyounen, op cit, 189.79 Ibid.80 R v McKay, [1997] 7 WWR 496 (Alberta Provincial Court).81 Ibid, 497.82 In 1996 the RCMP and the Canadian Justice Department retained Transformative Justice Australia toconsult on the establishment of Family Group Conferencing in Canada.83 McKay, op cit, 497.
22
Undoubtedly, there may be merit in Canadian ‘borrowing’ from Antipodean law
reform initiatives and proposals (and vice versa). However, there is something curious
and troubling about the story of a judge who, convinced of the value of First Nation
community participation in justice administration on the Cochrane Reserve, Alberta
(in the form of circle sentencing) adopted in pursuit of this objective a set of
principles and processes (namely, ‘Family Group Conferencing’ (FGC)) developed by
two non-Aboriginal Australian academics/entrepreneurs, and purportedly based on the
traditional justice methods of the Maori of Aoteroa/New Zealand. Reilly J claims
“that in trying to make better justice for the aboriginal, I have learned something from
the aboriginal that may improve justice for all.”84 However, the adoption of the FGC
model for implementation in a First Nation community in Alberta appears to have
been based on what Cunneen has described in the Australian context as
the spurious assumption that there are homologous social structures among Indigenous
cultures. In other words, Indigenous people all over the world are seen as the same. Family
group conferencing grew out of Maori traditions; Maori people are Indigenous; therefore all
Indigenous people will benefit from family group conferencing. Ultimately such a view is
racist, ascribing as it does some essentialist core to what it is to be authentically ‘Indigenous’
without cultural, spatial or temporal difference.85
A number of commentators have expressed similar concerns with respect to the
adoption of Family Group Conferencing in Canada. For example, Juan Tauri has
expressed concern
that the imported family group conferencing forum (from New Zealand) is being forced upon
Canadian First Nations at the expense of their own, and more appropriate, justice mechanisms
... Neither Federal nor Provincial governments in Canada should imagine that just because
family group conferencing is supposedly based on indigenous (i.e., Maori) justice processes,
that it is therefore appropriate for indigenes residing in their borders.86
Gloria Lee has observed:
84 Ibid.85 Chris Cunneen, “Community Conferencing and the Fiction of Indigenous Control” (1997) 30(3) TheAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology 292 at 300. See also Harry Blagg, “A JustMeasure of Shame?: Aboriginal Youth and Conferencing in Australia” (1997) 37(4) British Journal ofCriminology 481.86 Juan Tauri, “Family Group Conferencing: The Myth of Indigenous Empowerment in New Zealand”(1999) 4(1) Justice as Healing 1. See also Juan Tauri, “Family Group Conferencing: A Case Study ofthe Indigenisation of New Zealand’s Justice System” (1998) 10(2) Current Issues in Criminal Justice168.
23
With all due respect to the Maori people who have generously shared their knowledge and
teachings with the government of their land in the hopes of benefiting the Maori youth—and
with kind thanks to the government of Canada and the justice departments for their
thoughtfulness—the First Nations people of North America, since time immemorial, have had
and still do have principles and processes in place to deal with disharmony within the
community much in the same way the Maori of New Zealand have. I am not sure whom that
surprises, but it needs to be pointed out.87
Of course, it is importance to recognise that particular First Nation
communities in Canada may choose to adopt the FGC model or some other form of
community-based or restorative justice not obviously or directly sourced in their own
traditional culture. To suggest that such a choice was improper would be inconsistent
with a recognition of the crucial need for Aboriginal self-determination in the area of
justice administration. However, if FGC is promoted as the ‘preferred’ model of
restorative justice—with implications for the availability of government funding and
judicial support—then there is a danger of foreclosing the option of utilising
traditional justice mechanisms, which may or may not resemble the FGC process.88
In addition to a focus on restoration rather than retribution, one of the major
points of departure between conventional approaches to sentencing in the Canadian
justice system and circle sentencing is that the latter process is predicated on
meaningful community participation in, and responsibility for, the process and the
outcome. In R v Webb,89 in which the first sentencing circle was conducted at the
Kwanlin Dun First Nation in Whitehorse, Stuart J observed that
While sentencing circles in each community are significantly different in many respects,
common to all circles is the opportunity for the community to participate and assume
responsibility. The circle setting continues to forge new partnerships between the justice
87 Gloria Lee, “The Newest Old Gem: Family Group Conferencing” (1997) 2(2) Justice as Healing 1.88 It is also important to recognise that from the point of view of influencing the locus of decision-making authority, the processes of family group conferencing cannot be assumed to be identical tothose of circle sentencing. In McKay the sentenced arrived at by Reilly J was based on the agreementreached through the Family Group Conference. Reilly J observed that “I cannot delegate mysentencing function, but … [i]t is my intention, in cases where it is appropriate, to suggest a FamilyGroup Conference and if it is held to make the fulfillment of any agreement reached therein a term ofthe sentence”: McKay, op cit, 499. In terms of its relationship to the ultimate sentencing decisionfamily group conferencing appears to more closely resemble a healing circle rather than a sentencingcircle, in the terms on which these two processes were distinguished in R v Sellon (1996) 140 Nfld &PEI R 313 (Newfoundland Supreme Court) (discussed further below). See also LaPrairie (1997), opcit.89 R v Webb, [1993] 1 CNLR 148 (Yukon Territorial Court).
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system and the community, and provides a positive working environment for developing a
common desire to explore new avenues for sharing responsibility.90
In light of this objective it is important to see the procedure of circle sentencing in
broader terms than simply the meeting ‘without desks and tables’ which is substituted
for a conventional sentencing hearing. While this is the defining ‘event’ of circle
sentencing, its effectiveness depends heavily on preparation and follow-up. Many
First Nation communities have now established justice committees which are
responsible for overseeing the circle sentencing process from the screening and
preparation of offenders seeking to have their cases determined in a sentencing circle,
through facilitation of the main sentencing circle meeting (or series of meetings),
including appointment of the ‘Keeper of the Circle’, up to the implementation of the
sentencing plan agreed to by the circle and approved by the judge.
That circle sentencing constitutes more than just a one-off meeting in the
space usually filled by the sentencing hearing is well illustrated by the case of R v
Lucas.91 In this case the Court was not advised until the commencement of the
scheduled hearing that the accused wanted to have his sentence determined in a
sentencing circle. The Crown did not support the holding of a circle, and so what
followed was, in the words of Hudson J, “not a sentencing circle in the cultural sense
that has been adopted in other courts”.92 Instead, the judge organised the sentencing
hearing as follows:
All persons who were present and were thought to be importance by the accused and his
counsel were heard. They were sworn at once and sat as a group and shared each other’s
company while testifying. Each was able to defer to another in answering the questions.93
Hudson J explained that sentencing circles “are achieved by some preparation and the
agreement of the prosecuting authorities, which was not the case here.”94
Given that one of the primary motivations for the initiation of circle
sentencing was that it would beneficial to involve the community in the decision-
90 Ibid, 153.91 R v Lucas, [1994] YJ No 107 (QL) (Yukon Territorial Court).92 Ibid, para 2.93 Ibid, para 1.94 Ibid, para 2. Hudson J continued, “However, though no circle resulted, there was certainly relaxationof the traditional way, and … I hope that the fullness of the presentation by the witnesses has achievedthe satisfaction of the community in expressing their interests and concern”: ibid, para 2. Interestingly,even though the case did not involve a full sentencing circle, the disposition clearly reflected theprinciples of community-based and culturally appropriate sentencing. Hudson J sentenced the offenderto three months imprisonment and two years probation. The primary probation condition was that theoffender was, ‘banished’ from the town of Mayo (where the offence occurred) to a First Nation “bushsettlement” called No-Gold where he would gain “the rehabilitative effects of required bush living,living the Indian way”: ibid, para 14.
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making process, it is important to consider how the ‘community’ is defined, and by
whom the community is represented (that is, who participates in the circle, or how the
participants are selected).
On the question of how community is defined, Stuart J has emphasised that “A
community is not a place, it is people.”95 It follows that while the practice of circle
sentencing has been primarily developed and used in First Nation reserve
communities that are relatively distinct in geographic, social and cultural terms, circle
sentencing need not be limited to such settings. For example, in R v SEH96 the
offender, an Aboriginal man living in Vancouver, requested circle sentencing.
Stromberg-Stein J acknowledged that “The constitution of the circle posed a challenge
insofar as defining a circle of peers within an urban setting.97 However, a circle was
convened, “composed of dedicated leaders of the native community in the Lower
Mainland representing many different interests and people from all walks of life.”98
Similarly, in considering a request for a sentencing circle from an Aboriginal man
living in Saskatoon, Grotsky J in the Saskatchewan Court of Queen’s Bench stated in
R v Cheekinew99 that in the context of determining the existence of an appropriate
community for the purpose of circle sentencing, “the term ‘community’ ought to
receive a wide and liberal construction as the term ‘community’ may be, and probably
is, a term capable of different interpretations depending on the residence … of the
particular offender …”100
The availability of a community for the purpose of circle sentencing involves
more than just being able to define the existence of a group, whether geographically
or personally. Community capacity, willingness and preparedness to participate in
criminal justice decision-making (and to oversee follow up) is a prerequisite for the
success of community-based justice whether in the form of circle sentencing or
otherwise. In its 1992 decision in R v Brown101 the Alberta Court of Appeal observed
that
Whether changes in the justice system may be made in the future to accommodate the special
needs of aboriginal communities, it is beyond the ability of a trial court or an appellate court
95 Stuart (1997), op cit.96 R v SEH, [1993] BCJ No 2967 (QL) (British Columbia Provincial Court).97 Ibid, para 1.98 Ibid.99 R v Cheekinew (1993), 80 CCC (3d) 143.100 Ibid, para 25. Note that Grotsky J denied the request for a circle partly on the basis that he was notconvinced that the offender had access to a community in Saskatoon for the purpose. See also R vMorin, op cit, which was the first sentencing circle in Saskatchewan to be held in an urban centre(Saskatoon). In R v Alaku (1993), 112 DLR (4d) 732 at 742 Dutil J in the Court of Québec expressedreservations about whether the process of “consultation circles” which he had begun to employ insmall Inuit communities in northern Québec would be appropriate in larger towns or cities.101 R v Brown (1992), 13 CR (4th) 346.
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to consider some modification of sentencing principles in a particular case unless there is
evidence before the court that the accused’s community is ready, willing and able to
undertake some process which will enhance the possibility of rehabilitation and set an
example which will deter other members of the community from similar conduct.102
Similarly, Bayda CJ noted in R v Morin that the “capacity of each of these participants
[offender, victim and community] to participate in a way that is likely to result in a
restoration or healing” is important.103 In R v Cheekinew Grotsky J specifically
identified “the nature of an offender’s community, and its willingness to participate in
the sentencing process” as “factors which … will … be relevant to the determination
of whether a sentencing circle ought to be established.”104
In terms of which members of the community are represented on the
sentencing circle the basic principle is that everyone is eligible and welcome to attend,
and that the community takes primary responsibility for ensuring that there is
appropriate representation amongst the participation. Commonly the community’s
justice committee will facilitate this process. In addition a number of judges have
required evidence that the circle is representative and not ‘partisan’ before approving
the holding of a sentencing circle. In R v Naappaluk105 Dutil J expressed the view that
circles
must always be made up of people who take a great deal of interest in the welfare of the
community. These people must also be representative of the community itself, to whose
opinion they give voice. Traditionally, Elders made important decisions. There should always
be a place for them at those sittings. The victim should also be heard.106
In R v Joseyounen, Fafard J identified as one of the criterion for the holding of a
sentencing circle that “There are elders or respected non-political community leaders
willing to participate”.107 In R v Alaku Dutil J bluntly expressed another of the
concerns that has prompted judicial oversight of the composition of circles: “It must
be clear that the circle members are not individuals in the pay of any accused
attempting to fool the court with regard to his sincerity.”108
102 Ibid, 356-57.103 Morin, op cit, 67.104 Cheekinew, op cit, para 15.105 R v Naappaluk, [1994] 2 CNLR 143 (Court of Québec).106 Ibid, para 84.107 Joseyounen, op cit, 187. Having stipulated this requirement, Fafard J noted that “The manysentencing circles I have held included participation of chiefs, band councillors, mayors, and others inpolitical office. I have never seen any of these persons attempt to influence the outcome by virtue oftheir political office.”108 Alaku, op cit, 742.
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In the context of an e